Buzzards Bay

Article

Buzzards Bay is a recurring place in the Collected Agenda archive, appearing 3 times across 3 issues between May 28, 2024 and July 15, 2025. The archive places it in contexts such as “The sharks allegedly haven’t arrived at Buzzards Bay yet”; “There’s a map of Buzzards Bay that I’ll bring to wherever I live forever”; “I like my map of Buzzards Bay”. It most often appears alongside Beverly’s, Chloe Pingeon, Club Chess.

Metadata

  • Category: Places
  • Mention count: 3
  • Issue count: 3
  • First seen: May 28, 2024
  • Last seen: July 15, 2025

Appears In

Source Context

Recovered passages from the original issue text. When the raw archive preserved outbound links inside the source passage, they are listed directly under the quote.

May 28, 2024 · Original source
Amtrak to the ocean tonight. Then I’m in the car leaving Providence with my dog and my dad and I’m making everyone roll up and down the windows so that I’ll catch the breeze at exactly the moment when you first smell salt. Full moon over the dock. Too cold to swim and then walk home, so we’re driving the van a quarter of the mile down the road to jump in. The sharks allegedly haven’t arrived at Buzzards Bay yet and there’s no light that isn’t moon and there’s nobody else here. Actually, everything is more beautiful than I could have ever possibly imagined.
October 07, 2024 · Original source
The Clinton St. apartment was small and I didn’t live there very long, the bed was lofted, and being that close to the ceiling felt eerie, I used to wake up sometimes and feel like things were caving in. I like my new apartment. Now, when I wake up, it’s all glass and sky and little planes floating out of LaGuardia Airport and drifting over me from what feels like such a distance. It’s been a series of subletters at the old place all summer, and so the boxes I’m moving don’t really even feel like mine. It’s depressing how much stuff has accumulated, most of it stuff I at one point purchased, probably within the last few years, I probably thought it would serve some purpose. There are some things I miss. There’s a map of Buzzards Bay that I’ll bring to wherever I live forever. Mostly, the clutter, or more realistically the dust, is starting to give me little red hives.
July 15, 2025 · Original source
Tuesday, July 8 There is a fire by the ocean and gray gray gray dusk and I had wine against my own best interest. I thought I would say, here is what I recall. I recall nothing. There is so much I could distinguish from the wreck of it all. I'm ok but you are not so in this world today, Iris is saying on the beach. I recall we went to The Folly. I closed the door in the bathroom up the stairs. I ate Chicken and Rice, Joe's Pizza, Springbone Kitchen, Two Martinis. Throw the butter from the fridge in the trash because it really smells like rot. I was not always convinced that everything was about to rot, but I was always pretty sure about the butter. It all becomes a bit trite in writing. Not in recollection. I wish I could recall so much of anything at all. What are your favorite furniture items in memory, my dad asks Iris after the beach. Iris says a yellow ottoman. My dad lights a fire. My dad is on StreetEasy. I'm on that artificial intelligence wave in a big way. You can tell I've developed the habit because I sound abruptly so much stupider. You can tell I have little ground to stand on because, absence, no memory, relinquish nostalgia and I have nothing to say. I liked the little wooden chairs by the fire in Massachusetts. I like my map of Buzzards Bay. I liked the wooden table at a house surrounded by all that green. I did first like the Bacchus mask in New York, though I am learning to be cautious with symbolism and the thing of what you may conjure. My dad liked the bed he built into his cabin. There are people who build cabins. There are people whose whims don't dictate their attacks. There are people who are just one person all at once. The dog chased the coyote up the beach and I chased the crab apple path up towards the house and there is a paisley blanket and an oil painting of a woman in a long pleat white dress and a black hat with a black bow and a small child with his hand clutched in hers. Wednesday, July 9 Lying on the speckled blue sheets under a canopy of white veil thinking about how I’m going to get the fuck back to the city. Thinking about where I am going to live. I am going to need to pull a lot of favors. I will not be listless. Wander around my all new neighborhood in a daze of self abandon. Abandon limbo. It will be interesting to see what happens when I abandon limbo. I suspect that it'll be nothing good. Were you so addicted to the chaos? Iris asks me. Will you need to manufacture new situations to respond to? It’s just that, reckless abandon doesn't really bother me, I say. It’s not so much that this is necessarily what I crave. There is a music box and I am noticing my initials on the inside. There are mussels in coconut milk and bluefish on the porch and I was quiet quiet quiet today, though I get the sense that suddenly all around me, it is beginning to happen fast fast fast. Thursday, July 10 I stopped with all the quiet and then I regretted it in an instant. There are gray walls like paper maché and a white wooden canopy bed frame and a toy boat all tan and teal green propped up on the bookshelf. You have been lying in every bed in the house, Iris said. Rotate them like musical chairs. I was not so sure where I should land. I was lying on a yellow bedspread, then. Dusk, then. The curtains were drawn but they were light and sheer and easy to imagine what was just on the other side. Friday, July 11 New York is pulsing pulsing pulsing summer and I am glad to be back even just, to do little with it. Dinner at Lure Fishbar which is lovely and a clarity summit on the terrace which is less rotten in its final days, smog over the railing and the lights are blinking on and off in dusk haze across the river and then, everyone leaves. I leave too. Bring drinks in plastic bottles to the bar. Starting my days earlier and ending them later. There will be other things. I could handwrite it next time. I could use lugger.com or the nice neighbor from May or the generosity from others that I worry I do not return or deserve to move the couch. So, nothing ever happens. Stay up until seven in the morning and then it's taking down the fir wreaths because those are becoming a fire hazard too. Taking down the buoy and the copper pot because those are coming with me. The terrace has become all clogged with cigarettes and I notice it only now, plastic tarnished wood and the cracks are all stuffed with tar and rainwater and dead branches. So, I could do yard work I suppose. Or, I could just leave. WHAT YOU SHOULD DO Tuesday, July 15 From 8pm - 12pm at The Brooklyn Center for Theatre Research — a one night only reading of an AI generated play trained on all Matthew Gasda’s plays. Error 404: Play Not Found. Tickets are free but donations are encouraged. - “This will be done with ample drinking and unseriousness--but the experiment may also be interesting on a philosophical level.”